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<text id=89TT0444>
<title>
Feb. 13, 1989: Dan Quayle's Diplomatic Debut
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Feb. 13, 1989 James Baker:The Velvet Hammer
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 37
Dan Quayle's Diplomatic Debut
</hdr><body>
<p>In his first foray abroad, he avoids mistakes -- and Communists
</p>
<p>By Dan Goodgame/Caracas
</p>
<p> The scene was rich with possibility. In the front row of the
Caracas theater where Venezuela's newly elected President Carlos
Andres Perez would be inaugurated sat U.S. Vice President Dan
Quayle, neophyte diplomat, basher of Communism and
self-described "cheerleader" for democracy. A mere six seats to
Quayle's right sat Cuban leader Fidel Castro, the bearded
antithesis of everything Quayle stands for. Was a confrontation
reminiscent of Richard Nixon's 1959 Moscow "kitchen debate"
with Nikita Khrushchev in the offing?
</p>
<p> In the end, Quayle and Castro exchanged nothing more than an
occasional glance. After Perez was sworn in, Castro, flanked by
a huge entourage, swept out of the hall while a crowd of
Venezuelans gawked and cheered. Quayle, under strict
instructions from the White House not to send any inadvertent
diplomatic signals by conversing with Communists, was hustled
quietly out a side door. But not before a group of young
Venezuelan women in the balcony begged him to stop for a
picture, squealing "Ooooh! You are so handsome!" Teased about
the incident at a press conference shortly afterward, Quayle
frowned and grew testy: "I've had enough of that back home."
</p>
<p> Quayle might be excused for feeling a bit frustrated by the
focus on his looks. Well aware of his image as a lightweight, he
carefully prepped for his first solo mission as a diplomat, a
three-day, largely ceremonial trip to Venezuela and El Salvador.
Still, the Vice President's handlers were nervous about a
possible blunder. When the chartered plane that was to carry
nearly 50 reporters along on the trip was abruptly canceled,
there were suspicions that the idea was to limit press coverage.
</p>
<p> As it turned out, Quayle performed better than even he might
have expected. He committed some small gaffes: tempting fate by
tasting tropical fruit at a Caracas fruit stand and rapping
former President Jimmy Carter for "complicating matters" by
discussing Central American peace plans with Nicaraguan
President Daniel Ortega. Quayle said he did not talk with his
boss during the trip and noted that the President was suffering
from laryngitis. He then took an unintentional swipe at Ronald
Reagan by adding that the former President sometimes used a
sore throat as an excuse for canceling press conferences.
</p>
<p> Francisco Aguilar-Urbina, an adviser to Costa Rican
President Oscar Arias, said at first that his delegation had
low expectations of Quayle: "The impression we had was that they
put him in a drawer during the campaign." But he later said
Quayle won "very positive reviews" in his talks with Latin
leaders. The Vice President impressed Brazil's President Jose
Sarney by asking about the country's November elections. "You
mean in Brazil?" replied Sarney, evidently astonished that
Quayle was aware of the upcoming vote. Even Ortega had kind if
somewhat condescending words: "I thought he showed an ability
to understand the political reality of Latin America."
</p>
<p> In El Salvador, Quayle did have a substantive message about
the Bush Administration's policies toward Central America. Like
Vice President Bush in 1983, Quayle warned Salvadoran military
officers and rightist politicians that the recent upsurge in
political murders must be reversed if the U.S. is to continue
pumping $545 million a year into the country. Quayle also
encouraged Salvador's President Jose Napoleon Duarte to
reconsider his rejection of the leftist rebels' request that
the March elections be postponed so they can take part.
</p>
<p> Quayle's mission was most useful in broadening the horizons
of an insular young politician whose horizons until recently
did not reach much beyond Indiana. During the campaign, Quayle
bragged about the foreign leaders he knew, but those were
chiefly from the NATO allies and Israel. In the rest of the
world, he has many people to meet and much to master before he
can be trusted to venture beyond a carefully prepared script. On
last week's tour Quayle persuaded at least a few observers that
he might be up to the task. As his official plane flew back to
Washington, the handful of journalists aboard helped the Vice
President celebrate his 42nd birthday by giving him a cake and a
present -- a Venezuelan bank note inscribed with: FIRST FOREIGN
TRIP: QUAYLE FAILS TO SCREW UP!
</p>
</body></article>
</text>